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  10. </style><title>Encodings support</title></head><body bgcolor="#8b7765" text="#000000" link="#a06060" vlink="#000000"><table border="0" width="100%" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" align="center"><tr><td width="120"><a href="http://swpat.ffii.org/"><img src="epatents.png" alt="Action against software patents" /></a></td><td width="180"><a href="http://www.gnome.org/"><img src="gnome2.png" alt="Gnome2 Logo" /></a><a href="http://www.w3.org/Status"><img src="w3c.png" alt="W3C Logo" /></a><a href="http://www.redhat.com/"><img src="redhat.gif" alt="Red Hat Logo" /></a><div align="left"><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/"><img src="Libxml2-Logo-180x168.gif" alt="Made with Libxml2 Logo" /></a></div></td><td><table border="0" width="90%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" bgcolor="#000000"><tr><td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3" bgcolor="#fffacd"><tr><td align="center"><h1>The XML C parser and toolkit of Gnome</h1><h2>Encodings support</h2></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" align="center"><tr><td bgcolor="#8b7765"><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td valign="top" width="200" bgcolor="#8b7765"><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#000000"><tr><td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3"><tr><td colspan="1" bgcolor="#eecfa1" align="center"><center><b>Main Menu</b></center></td></tr><tr><td bgcolor="#fffacd"><form action="search.php" enctype="application/x-www-form-urlencoded" method="get"><input name="query" type="text" size="20" value="" /><input name="submit" type="submit" value="Search ..." /></form><ul><li><a href="index.html">Home</a></li><li><a href="html/index.html">Reference Manual</a></li><li><a href="intro.html">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="FAQ.html">FAQ</a></li><li><a href="docs.html" style="font-weight:bold">Developer Menu</a></li><li><a href="bugs.html">Reporting bugs and getting help</a></li><li><a href="help.html">How to help</a></li><li><a href="downloads.html">Downloads</a></li><li><a href="news.html">Releases</a></li><li><a href="XMLinfo.html">XML</a></li><li><a href="XSLT.html">XSLT</a></li><li><a href="xmldtd.html">Validation &amp; DTDs</a></li><li><a href="encoding.html">Encodings support</a></li><li><a href="catalog.html">Catalog support</a></li><li><a href="namespaces.html">Namespaces</a></li><li><a href="contribs.html">Contributions</a></li><li><a href="examples/index.html" style="font-weight:bold">Code Examples</a></li><li><a href="html/index.html" style="font-weight:bold">API Menu</a></li><li><a href="guidelines.html">XML Guidelines</a></li><li><a href="ChangeLog.html">Recent Changes</a></li></ul></td></tr></table><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3"><tr><td colspan="1" bgcolor="#eecfa1" align="center"><center><b>Related links</b></center></td></tr><tr><td bgcolor="#fffacd"><ul><li><a href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/xml/">Mail archive</a></li><li><a href="http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/">XSLT libxslt</a></li><li><a href="http://phd.cs.unibo.it/gdome2/">DOM gdome2</a></li><li><a href="http://www.aleksey.com/xmlsec/">XML-DSig xmlsec</a></li><li><a href="ftp://xmlsoft.org/">FTP</a></li><li><a href="http://www.zlatkovic.com/projects/libxml/">Windows binaries</a></li><li><a href="http://opencsw.org/packages/libxml2">Solaris binaries</a></li><li><a href="http://www.explain.com.au/oss/libxml2xslt.html">MacOsX binaries</a></li><li><a href="http://codespeak.net/lxml/">lxml Python bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://cpan.uwinnipeg.ca/dist/XML-LibXML">Perl bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://libxmlplusplus.sourceforge.net/">C++ bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://www.zend.com/php5/articles/php5-xmlphp.php#Heading4">PHP bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/libxml2-pas/">Pascal bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://libxml.rubyforge.org/">Ruby bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://tclxml.sourceforge.net/">Tcl bindings</a></li><li><a href="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?product=libxml2">Bug Tracker</a></li></ul></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td><td valign="top" bgcolor="#8b7765"><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="1" width="100%"><tr><td><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#000000"><tr><td><table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#fffacd"><p>If you are not really familiar with Internationalization (usual shortcut
  11. is I18N) , Unicode, characters and glyphs, I suggest you read a <a href="http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2003/04/06/Unicode">presentation</a>
  12. by Tim Bray on Unicode and why you should care about it.</p><p>If you don't understand why <b>it does not make sense to have a string
  13. without knowing what encoding it uses</b>, then as Joel Spolsky said <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html">please do not
  14. write another line of code until you finish reading that article.</a>. It is
  15. a prerequisite to understand this page, and avoid a lot of problems with
  16. libxml2, XML or text processing in general.</p><p>Table of Content:</p><ol><li><a href="encoding.html#What">What does internationalization support
  17. mean ?</a></li>
  18. <li><a href="encoding.html#internal">The internal encoding, how and
  19. why</a></li>
  20. <li><a href="encoding.html#implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></li>
  21. <li><a href="encoding.html#Default">Default supported encodings</a></li>
  22. <li><a href="encoding.html#extend">How to extend the existing
  23. support</a></li>
  24. </ol><h3><a name="What" id="What">What does internationalization support mean ?</a></h3><p>XML was designed from the start to allow the support of any character set
  25. by using Unicode. Any conformant XML parser has to support the UTF-8 and
  26. UTF-16 default encodings which can both express the full unicode ranges. UTF8
  27. is a variable length encoding whose greatest points are to reuse the same
  28. encoding for ASCII and to save space for Western encodings, but it is a bit
  29. more complex to handle in practice. UTF-16 use 2 bytes per character (and
  30. sometimes combines two pairs), it makes implementation easier, but looks a
  31. bit overkill for Western languages encoding. Moreover the XML specification
  32. allows the document to be encoded in other encodings at the condition that
  33. they are clearly labeled as such. For example the following is a wellformed
  34. XML document encoded in ISO-8859-1 and using accentuated letters that we
  35. French like for both markup and content:</p><pre>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;
  36. &lt;très&gt;là&lt;/très&gt;</pre><p>Having internationalization support in libxml2 means the following:</p><ul><li>the document is properly parsed</li>
  37. <li>information about it's encoding is saved</li>
  38. <li>it can be modified</li>
  39. <li>it can be saved in its original encoding</li>
  40. <li>it can also be saved in another encoding supported by libxml2 (for
  41. example straight UTF8 or even an ASCII form)</li>
  42. </ul><p>Another very important point is that the whole libxml2 API, with the
  43. exception of a few routines to read with a specific encoding or save to a
  44. specific encoding, is completely agnostic about the original encoding of the
  45. document.</p><p>It should be noted too that the HTML parser embedded in libxml2 now obey
  46. the same rules too, the following document will be (as of 2.2.2) handled in
  47. an internationalized fashion by libxml2 too:</p><pre>&lt;!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"
  48. "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"&gt;
  49. &lt;html lang="fr"&gt;
  50. &lt;head&gt;
  51. &lt;META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"&gt;
  52. &lt;/head&gt;
  53. &lt;body&gt;
  54. &lt;p&gt;W3C crée des standards pour le Web.&lt;/body&gt;
  55. &lt;/html&gt;</pre><h3><a name="internal" id="internal">The internal encoding, how and why</a></h3><p>One of the core decisions was to force all documents to be converted to a
  56. default internal encoding, and that encoding to be UTF-8, here are the
  57. rationales for those choices:</p><ul><li>keeping the native encoding in the internal form would force the libxml
  58. users (or the code associated) to be fully aware of the encoding of the
  59. original document, for examples when adding a text node to a document,
  60. the content would have to be provided in the document encoding, i.e. the
  61. client code would have to check it before hand, make sure it's conformant
  62. to the encoding, etc ... Very hard in practice, though in some specific
  63. cases this may make sense.</li>
  64. <li>the second decision was which encoding. From the XML spec only UTF8 and
  65. UTF16 really makes sense as being the two only encodings for which there
  66. is mandatory support. UCS-4 (32 bits fixed size encoding) could be
  67. considered an intelligent choice too since it's a direct Unicode mapping
  68. support. I selected UTF-8 on the basis of efficiency and compatibility
  69. with surrounding software:
  70. <ul><li>UTF-8 while a bit more complex to convert from/to (i.e. slightly
  71. more costly to import and export CPU wise) is also far more compact
  72. than UTF-16 (and UCS-4) for a majority of the documents I see it used
  73. for right now (RPM RDF catalogs, advogato data, various configuration
  74. file formats, etc.) and the key point for today's computer
  75. architecture is efficient uses of caches. If one nearly double the
  76. memory requirement to store the same amount of data, this will trash
  77. caches (main memory/external caches/internal caches) and my take is
  78. that this harms the system far more than the CPU requirements needed
  79. for the conversion to UTF-8</li>
  80. <li>Most of libxml2 version 1 users were using it with straight ASCII
  81. most of the time, doing the conversion with an internal encoding
  82. requiring all their code to be rewritten was a serious show-stopper
  83. for using UTF-16 or UCS-4.</li>
  84. <li>UTF-8 is being used as the de-facto internal encoding standard for
  85. related code like the <a href="http://www.pango.org/">pango</a>
  86. upcoming Gnome text widget, and a lot of Unix code (yet another place
  87. where Unix programmer base takes a different approach from Microsoft
  88. - they are using UTF-16)</li>
  89. </ul></li>
  90. </ul><p>What does this mean in practice for the libxml2 user:</p><ul><li>xmlChar, the libxml2 data type is a byte, those bytes must be assembled
  91. as UTF-8 valid strings. The proper way to terminate an xmlChar * string
  92. is simply to append 0 byte, as usual.</li>
  93. <li>One just need to make sure that when using chars outside the ASCII set,
  94. the values has been properly converted to UTF-8</li>
  95. </ul><h3><a name="implemente" id="implemente">How is it implemented ?</a></h3><p>Let's describe how all this works within libxml, basically the I18N
  96. (internationalization) support get triggered only during I/O operation, i.e.
  97. when reading a document or saving one. Let's look first at the reading
  98. sequence:</p><ol><li>when a document is processed, we usually don't know the encoding, a
  99. simple heuristic allows to detect UTF-16 and UCS-4 from encodings where
  100. the ASCII range (0-0x7F) maps with ASCII</li>
  101. <li>the xml declaration if available is parsed, including the encoding
  102. declaration. At that point, if the autodetected encoding is different
  103. from the one declared a call to xmlSwitchEncoding() is issued.</li>
  104. <li>If there is no encoding declaration, then the input has to be in either
  105. UTF-8 or UTF-16, if it is not then at some point when processing the
  106. input, the converter/checker of UTF-8 form will raise an encoding error.
  107. You may end-up with a garbled document, or no document at all ! Example:
  108. <pre>~/XML -&gt; ./xmllint err.xml
  109. err.xml:1: error: Input is not proper UTF-8, indicate encoding !
  110. &lt;très&gt;là&lt;/très&gt;
  111. ^
  112. err.xml:1: error: Bytes: 0xE8 0x73 0x3E 0x6C
  113. &lt;très&gt;là&lt;/très&gt;
  114. ^</pre>
  115. </li>
  116. <li>xmlSwitchEncoding() does an encoding name lookup, canonicalize it, and
  117. then search the default registered encoding converters for that encoding.
  118. If it's not within the default set and iconv() support has been compiled
  119. it, it will ask iconv for such an encoder. If this fails then the parser
  120. will report an error and stops processing:
  121. <pre>~/XML -&gt; ./xmllint err2.xml
  122. err2.xml:1: error: Unsupported encoding UnsupportedEnc
  123. &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UnsupportedEnc"?&gt;
  124. ^</pre>
  125. </li>
  126. <li>From that point the encoder processes progressively the input (it is
  127. plugged as a front-end to the I/O module) for that entity. It captures
  128. and converts on-the-fly the document to be parsed to UTF-8. The parser
  129. itself just does UTF-8 checking of this input and process it
  130. transparently. The only difference is that the encoding information has
  131. been added to the parsing context (more precisely to the input
  132. corresponding to this entity).</li>
  133. <li>The result (when using DOM) is an internal form completely in UTF-8
  134. with just an encoding information on the document node.</li>
  135. </ol><p>Ok then what happens when saving the document (assuming you
  136. collected/built an xmlDoc DOM like structure) ? It depends on the function
  137. called, xmlSaveFile() will just try to save in the original encoding, while
  138. xmlSaveFileTo() and xmlSaveFileEnc() can optionally save to a given
  139. encoding:</p><ol><li>if no encoding is given, libxml2 will look for an encoding value
  140. associated to the document and if it exists will try to save to that
  141. encoding,
  142. <p>otherwise everything is written in the internal form, i.e. UTF-8</p>
  143. </li>
  144. <li>so if an encoding was specified, either at the API level or on the
  145. document, libxml2 will again canonicalize the encoding name, lookup for a
  146. converter in the registered set or through iconv. If not found the
  147. function will return an error code</li>
  148. <li>the converter is placed before the I/O buffer layer, as another kind of
  149. buffer, then libxml2 will simply push the UTF-8 serialization to through
  150. that buffer, which will then progressively be converted and pushed onto
  151. the I/O layer.</li>
  152. <li>It is possible that the converter code fails on some input, for example
  153. trying to push an UTF-8 encoded Chinese character through the UTF-8 to
  154. ISO-8859-1 converter won't work. Since the encoders are progressive they
  155. will just report the error and the number of bytes converted, at that
  156. point libxml2 will decode the offending character, remove it from the
  157. buffer and replace it with the associated charRef encoding &amp;#123; and
  158. resume the conversion. This guarantees that any document will be saved
  159. without losses (except for markup names where this is not legal, this is
  160. a problem in the current version, in practice avoid using non-ascii
  161. characters for tag or attribute names). A special "ascii" encoding name
  162. is used to save documents to a pure ascii form can be used when
  163. portability is really crucial</li>
  164. </ol><p>Here are a few examples based on the same test document:</p><pre>~/XML -&gt; ./xmllint isolat1
  165. &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;
  166. &lt;très&gt;là&lt;/très&gt;
  167. ~/XML -&gt; ./xmllint --encode UTF-8 isolat1
  168. &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
  169. &lt;très&gt;là  &lt;/très&gt;
  170. ~/XML -&gt; </pre><p>The same processing is applied (and reuse most of the code) for HTML I18N
  171. processing. Looking up and modifying the content encoding is a bit more
  172. difficult since it is located in a &lt;meta&gt; tag under the &lt;head&gt;,
  173. so a couple of functions htmlGetMetaEncoding() and htmlSetMetaEncoding() have
  174. been provided. The parser also attempts to switch encoding on the fly when
  175. detecting such a tag on input. Except for that the processing is the same
  176. (and again reuses the same code).</p><h3><a name="Default" id="Default">Default supported encodings</a></h3><p>libxml2 has a set of default converters for the following encodings
  177. (located in encoding.c):</p><ol><li>UTF-8 is supported by default (null handlers)</li>
  178. <li>UTF-16, both little and big endian</li>
  179. <li>ISO-Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) covering most western languages</li>
  180. <li>ASCII, useful mostly for saving</li>
  181. <li>HTML, a specific handler for the conversion of UTF-8 to ASCII with HTML
  182. predefined entities like &amp;copy; for the Copyright sign.</li>
  183. </ol><p>More over when compiled on an Unix platform with iconv support the full
  184. set of encodings supported by iconv can be instantly be used by libxml. On a
  185. linux machine with glibc-2.1 the list of supported encodings and aliases fill
  186. 3 full pages, and include UCS-4, the full set of ISO-Latin encodings, and the
  187. various Japanese ones.</p><p>To convert from the UTF-8 values returned from the API to another encoding
  188. then it is possible to use the function provided from <a href="html/libxml-encoding.html">the encoding module</a> like <a href="html/libxml-encoding.html#UTF8Toisolat1">UTF8Toisolat1</a>, or use the
  189. POSIX <a href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/iconv.html">iconv()</a>
  190. API directly.</p><h4>Encoding aliases</h4><p>From 2.2.3, libxml2 has support to register encoding names aliases. The
  191. goal is to be able to parse document whose encoding is supported but where
  192. the name differs (for example from the default set of names accepted by
  193. iconv). The following functions allow to register and handle new aliases for
  194. existing encodings. Once registered libxml2 will automatically lookup the
  195. aliases when handling a document:</p><ul><li>int xmlAddEncodingAlias(const char *name, const char *alias);</li>
  196. <li>int xmlDelEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li>
  197. <li>const char * xmlGetEncodingAlias(const char *alias);</li>
  198. <li>void xmlCleanupEncodingAliases(void);</li>
  199. </ul><h3><a name="extend" id="extend">How to extend the existing support</a></h3><p>Well adding support for new encoding, or overriding one of the encoders
  200. (assuming it is buggy) should not be hard, just write input and output
  201. conversion routines to/from UTF-8, and register them using
  202. xmlNewCharEncodingHandler(name, xxxToUTF8, UTF8Toxxx), and they will be
  203. called automatically if the parser(s) encounter such an encoding name
  204. (register it uppercase, this will help). The description of the encoders,
  205. their arguments and expected return values are described in the encoding.h
  206. header.</p><p><a href="bugs.html">Daniel Veillard</a></p></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></body></html>